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The Chronicle Telegraph (190101), 4 Mar 1909, p. 6

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=*Phese Pills are sold by all mediâ€" #ime ‘dealers or you can get them by at 50 cents a box or six boxes $8.50 from The Dr. Williams‘ Mocâ€" Co., Brockville, Ont. ed me to give these Pills a tmal. It was not long before I fclt some _ teâ€" Mef â€" Trom the distress after _ mcals, mnd as I continued the use of _ the pills all languor and drowsiness and headaches _ left me and I begon to @hjoy â€" increased â€" energy _ and . new m:h. Toâ€"day 1 am a well man, j ig the best of health, with nevâ€" @¢ o a twinge of the old trouble, and % attribute my cure entirely to the #air use of Dr. Williams‘ Pink n Ensm ons give health and strength to weak I.\tmt of the whole business. Dr. Carâ€" worn out people., men is a believer in the old order of Mr. 1. Thomas Curry, Port Maitâ€" things. He does not believe in indiâ€" land, N.S. says:â€""Abtout three yeats vidualities and individual thought. He ago I was attacked with what the is a staunch advocate of the literal doctors termed acute indigestion. The teachings of the Bible and the _ old first indication was a bad taste in my discipline of the church. mouth in the morning and a | sallow | ‘ There is good authority for _ the complexion. Later as these symptoms statement that years ago whew lRev. developed _ my tongue was heavily Dr. Workman delivered his _ famous coated, especially in the morning, and lecture, Dr. Carm@n said that he I felt particularly dull. My appetite would put Dr. Workman down _ and began to dwingle, and cven a . light ‘l'""' h""'"" he d"‘"‘-’ He is now after meal left me with a sense of having l::,,'., ‘lf“"kst‘;l"‘ ‘What will the end eaten too much. As 1 grew worse 1 [ ) :al.fletc question of, a very proâ€" ate barely enough to sustain my boâ€" en hodist here this morning. dy, but still experienced the most uk 7 tfl'te pains. A â€" wretched _ languor Various Opinions. ecame â€" over me â€" which 1 could not " i throw off. It seemed as if I were al “l‘h‘e myp‘::',:?:ct :.i;ht;l:st 1“".\”!‘ * a k . Jacason, the ways lired, w_nlh but little strength | old preachers and laymen frowa ,wil.h and frequent violent headaches. _ The | disapproval. remedies given me by my doctor, . as . well as many others failed to restore | _ Dr. Jackson‘s congregation is with me, or even to relieve me. 1 was |him. It is understood that a h=(1 in this very unhappy state for _ alâ€" |call has been sent ut fo . imeecting mosy a year when 1 read in a newsâ€" fof the pulpit and supply committee of paper one day ol the cure in a case the quarterly board for toâ€"night. On similar to mine through the use of | this committce are R. Brown, H. H. Dr. Williams‘ Pink Pills. This decicâ€"| Fudger, J. W. Flavelle, Hon. G. A. Cured Through the Timely Use of Dr. William‘s Pink Pills. ACUTE INDIGESTION MANITOBA WHEAT AT $1.11} In conclusion Mr. Costello says:â€" "Owing to the Canadian mills havâ€" ing a limited market they are comâ€" pelled to show a large number of deâ€" signs each _ season and manufacture from comparatively short warps, which interferes with production and increaâ€" ses . cost. Those specializations which are so general in Yorkshire have _ many advantages in loweting the cost of production and also enaâ€" Vie the manufac{urers in England â€" to do a large volume of business on w comparatively small capital, which is not possible in Canada." cents a week, that in the rag deâ€" partment the average . wage of the feeders of â€" machines is $4.87, that under the heading of seribbling and carding women and girls earn about $8 per week, while men earn on . an aÂ¥erage of $4.87 to $6. For spinners the average for men is $6.08 to $7.â€" 30. On the whole the figures show that â€" wages accepted by the Yorkâ€" shire operatives are considerably lowâ€" er than those paid similar operativâ€" es on this continent. The conclusion of the report is that in order to make any fair comparison between the cost of manufacturing in Canada and _ in (ireat Britain it is necessary (o take into account such items as wages ; more expensive factory buildings, owâ€" ing to the rigorous climate and . the extra cost of heating; the need for adâ€" ditional buildings to provide for the necessity of carrying larger ?stocks, owing to Canada being far removed from the base of supply, and also beâ€"| cause Canadian mills are pl‘.:ctically‘ compelled by local market conditions to purchase a year‘s supply of Canâ€" adian wools after shearing. The highâ€" er rate _ of interest on money emâ€" ployed, the increased cost of machinâ€" ery and the more expensive motive power owing to higher prices for fuel are also elements in cost in Canada. 6 qi« i dntcttin hi.\ x P s hant ecviirrond special commissioner of the Departâ€" ment of Customs, appointed last swmâ€" mef to inquire into the conditions of the woollen industry in England,with a view to determining the Governâ€" ment‘s policy on the tariff on woolâ€" lens, was presented to Parliament toâ€" day by the Minister of Customs. Mr. Costello gives a statement al wages ‘and the condition of labor in _ the districts of Bradford, Leeds and Hudâ€" dersfield, but no comparison is made with the wages paid the woollen mill employes in Canada, and the figures are of interest chiefly to those connecâ€" ted with the textile industry, and as w basis for any revision of the tariff the Government may deem necessary. Ottawa, Fob. 26.â€"The report of the Man., Feb. 27.â€"American med the Winnipeg wheat Speaking of the letter, a member of the above committee said that Dr. Carmen spoke as if Mr. Jackson had been brought here without reference to him, whereas the appointment of Dr. Jackson was made under Dr. Carâ€" men‘s approval. "Ho â€" comes to us M Canada as a minister from Britain, bired as _ an assistant, it seoms to a church in this country under some such arrangeâ€" mont as 1 trust may never be repoatâ€" ed in our Mcthodism, dishonoring and submerging the _ opemn doots to all mannet of irregulatity. The â€" annual eontcguce must have put some confiâ€" dence in him, for it exacted Vlfivu;:l;. The esteemed brethren who employed him, generally careful of church. orâ€" Dr. Jackson‘s congregation is with him. It is understood that a h=i(1 call has been sent eut fo . mocling of the pulpit and supply committee of the quarterly board for toâ€"night. On this committce are R. Brown, H. H. Fudger, J. W. Flavelle, Hon. . A. Cox, J. D. lvey and Alexander Mills. Dr. _ Carma@n‘s ictter, which . has started the controversy, is in â€" part as follows The younger Methodist clergy seem to sympatnize with Dr. Jacason, the old preachers and laymen frowa with disapproval. country, are wondering if the result "I am guilty, 'acéording to Dr. Carâ€" of the controversy will be a â€" disâ€" | Ineb, of ‘an abused trust, a violated ruption of the chutch. hospitality,‘ and what is if possible The letter came as a bolt from the | still worse of ‘loosening moral Honds‘ blue and is considered by both clergy , and ‘debauching the public mind‘ by and laity to be a declaration of war | my religious teaching. I cannot teâ€" between Dr. Cameron and Dr. Jackâ€" | cognize either myself or my teachin son, who has recently been named a / in Dr. Carmen‘s language, Lct mg professor at Victoria. |hrethn'n and â€" the mflnm'-r&; of my Dr. Jackson himself was very much | congregation say â€" whether â€" or og ’t' surprised. His orthodoxy has NeV@L | it is deserved. e before been assailed, especially nut' . in England. e "OL the statements made in the adâ€". It is the growing belicf that â€" the naming of Dr. Jackson to teach the Bible to the future Methodist clergyâ€" men at Victoria College _ was the start of the whole business. Dr. Carâ€" Toronto Mcthodists, in fact as far as can be learned from all over the country, are wondering if the result of the controversy will be a . disâ€" ruption of the chutch. Rev. Dr. Carman says that the pasâ€" tor of the Sherbourne Street Mecthoâ€" dist Church has proved unfaithful to the trust imposed upon him. . Calls Dr. Jackson "the assistant pastor of Sherbourne street,"‘ which is â€" taken by many as a studied insult. (ieorge A. Cox‘s pastor will _ not talk on the matter at all. Toâ€"night he replied in a public letter in. which he takes the stand he has _ already taken and, it is said, will be backed by the wealthy and influential citiâ€" zens of the church in Toronto. Rev. George Jackson‘s sensational utterance to the Young Men‘s Chrisâ€" tian Association a short time . ago, that the Book of Genesis was a myth, that the first book of the Bible was more allegorical than a history â€" of the beginning of the world _ has brought down a storm of invectives denouncing the foreign minister‘s atâ€" titude in the matter by Rev. Dr. Carmen, the head of the Methodist Church in this country. Toronto, Fceb. 236.â€" The call _ to arms has been sounded in the Methoâ€" dist Church in Canada for the war between the old and new school, beâ€" tween the oldâ€"fashioned and the newâ€" fashioned, the old mother‘s Bible and the Higher Criticism is on and is on in earnest. Carmar ~s. Jackson Controversy May Res in war Between the New and old Schools ol Theology. Where Will It End? METHODIST CHURCH ‘‘Need I say more? God is my witâ€" ness with what sweat of brain and of heart I have laborgd, both by voice and by pen, to gerve Him in the Gosâ€" "At tlis moment I have in preparâ€" align an aduress to be delivered at wur _ _neat montbly men‘s meeting on this â€" question, ‘Docs the Old Testaâ€" ment contain a divine revelation®‘ and the address is intendod to be from first to last one long, emphatic, unâ€" equivocal afirmative. _ Where, _ then, it will be asked, do I differ from some of my breathren? Simply _ in this: That 1 cannot accept _ their reading of some of the literary forms through which it has pleased the Diâ€" vine Spirit to communicate His will to men. _ The teligious value of â€" the fitst cleven chapters of Genesis is as much to me as it is to them, but where they sce histoty and science, as woell as spiritual truth, 1 can seo spiritual truth alonc. ‘‘Moreover, right or wrong, I do but share the @ommon beliet of almost all the most trusted leadets of evanâ€" golical Christianity throughout Great Britain toâ€"day. and New "To restate _ and defend my belie; concerning the Old Tostament, in the course of a single letter, is obviously impossible por do I feel that I â€" am under any obligation to any man who assails me as Dr. Carmen has done. But in order, if possible, to atlay un~ casiness in the minds _ of some for whose good opinion/ln:ntonain a high regatd, let me attéempt something _ of the nature of a brief, personal confesâ€" sion of faith. I beliete, I have never doubted, I have never on®d called in question the inspiration an«g authoriâ€" ty of te laile, both Old Trstament "OI the statements made in the adâ€" dress I have nothing to retract. They were not made thoughtlessly,. but deâ€" liberately, and after due consideraâ€" tion; Yut let it be noted, it is by the whole address that I stand, not merely by brief scraps of it, that apâ€" peared in the public press. "I regret the terms of contempt in which Dr. Carmen has chosen to teâ€" fer io me. 1 am, he tells you readâ€" ets, ‘a minister from Britain, hired as an assistant to a church of this counâ€" try,‘ whom Toronto conference ‘gave shelter.‘ If I had been poor clerical vagrant, piteously knocking at the door of Canadian ‘Methodism, . the language might have been pardoned, lut does not Dr. Carmen know that for 18 years I held in Edinburgh an honorable position under the British Weslcyan Methodist conference, and that it was only at the call of the Sherbourne Street Church, confirmed by the action of the Toronto conferâ€" ence, that I left my work in Scetland to come to this city? "‘I had fully resolved to take no part in the discussion which has arisâ€" en over my recent address at the Y. M.C.A., bu§ the letter of Dr. Carâ€" m&0 compels me to speak. utterly _ an antiâ€"conne®i@bal Comp‘iâ€" cation. How their employ has obâ€" served the claims of hospitality and kept the previous trust recent . dieâ€" closures demonstrate. To cast upon the conference that gave him shelter, and so upoun the body of brethren, the imputation of insincerity in _ their opinions, cowardice in their utteranâ€" ces and deceit even in their silence might at least border upom an atsurd trust and violated hospitality. He himsel{ that speaketh out is the hero and the honest man! Shows Superficial Knowledge. ‘‘For a man to say that a correct theory of the origin of the universe, the origin of the human race, and the origin of sin is no part of the Chrisâ€" tian faith‘ shows very superficial and attenuated thinking. We are not,like higher critios, alter theories, but afâ€" ter facts in their logical and historic order. What does he make of the Chrisfian faith? A thing of moment, a bursting bubble on a rolling tide, thin and dark at the top, just ready to ‘break before our eyes? Or is it a well and logically compacted system of the being of the Eternal God and his attributes as revealed to us, His purposes and His acts? . What would we know of the Christian faith but for the revelations and recordsâ€" of God in Holy Scriptures through the cenâ€" turics? _ To make the first chapters of these records as set down in our books unhistoric and unscientific does not carry the judgment or command the assent of the _ ripest scholarship and the best men. It calls forth the fanciful theorizing and tumultous janâ€" glo of speakers and writers more â€" or less instructed, and here. and . there taints a reputable scholar. 1t sgettles nothing, but fills the air with cloud and dust, the church with suspicion, . confusion and strife." j Toâ€"night Dr. Jackson replied to Dr Carmen as follows: His Son, nor has He left me States His Belicl into so unmethodistic and Dr. Jackson‘s Reply. compliâ€" Toronto, Fcb. 38.â€"The Jackson«Carâ€" man feud skipt toâ€"Cay, as befits â€" the Nabbath. From the Mcthodist â€" pulâ€" pits no imention was made of the subâ€" ject. Dr. Jackson at the Sherbourne 4 Street Church preached a very st.aid‘ , sermon with nothing argumentative in| it ‘"‘Now, another wellâ€"known minister of our church, who takes substantial ly the same position as Mr. Jackson with regard to the sarly chapters of Genesis, was for years a member of the same conference as Dr. Carman, and his position was well known to Dr. Carman, but the general superinâ€" tendént never preferred a charge of heresy against him. I think 1 am right then, in consliding that Dr. Carâ€" man does not regard Mr. Jackson‘s "As to Dr. Carman‘s personal atâ€" tack on Mr. .Jackson, it is only to be regretted that his language was exâ€" travagant and apparently written unâ€" der strong excitement. What he has thus written in haste, he will, 1 beâ€" lieve, duly retract when he comes to wrigh his words more carelully. "I don‘t think that Dr. Carman can mea«n that Mr. Jackson‘s teaching is contragy to the doctrinal standards of the Methodist Chutch. Our discipline requires of a minister, if he believes that the teaching of anothor ministet is contrary to our stundards, that he lay a charge. Rov. Eber (Crummy, B. Sc., D.D,, pastor of the Bathurst Street Methoâ€" dist Church, said: ‘There are Methodists 1 hear _ who agree with _ Mr. Jackson, But il all the Metbodists in Toronto agree to it I am not going to agree to the givâ€" ing up of the dear old Bible for any scientific, _ rationalisticâ€"kaledatscopic theory that Dr. Eakin, Mr. Jackson, Prof. McFadyen and Dr. Crummy may present." ‘"‘These lectures struck at the founâ€" dation on _ which the Y.M.C.A. is buiit. 1 am glad to find that the last two lectures have been cancelled. Mon. S. H. Blake, K.C., expressed his disapproval of Rev. Jackson‘s lecâ€" tures in these words: The matter has, however, made‘ the largest stit in Toronto church circles in years, and is discussed on all sidâ€" 68. > 1t was also an orthodox sermon. Once he said. ‘"‘The teaching of Moses and the prophets are good enough for me,‘"‘ but apart from this he made no remarks that could be at all appliod to the Jacksonian controversy. Dr. Carman was at Sinith‘s Falls at the anniversary services there. In the evening he preached from St. Luke 17:31. _ "If they have not Moses and the prophets, etc." he Free Press last night that _ up ‘ D%* Breathrenâ€"We need to remind zum,‘&?&z ourselves that Lent is once more at all Western Ontario and some of the : M With its call to selfâ€"examination Michigan centres had been notified, 204 sellâ€"discipline, and therefore with no trace had yet been !und of the }!® OPPoOftunities of gaining a loffies { man‘s movements. | vision and bigher attainment. There Fears are entertained by his family | Will be in every parish special opporâ€" and also by the potice of Port Huron, | tunities for more regular and frequent where Hauch used to live, that the PAfticipation in the appointed means man has been waylaid and killed for O! £"ace; and this added and sustained his money. |activity of the cburch at this season It was found that Hauch reached |is uot merely unreasoning obedieme { Sarnia all right, but after that he disâ€" to a vegerable custom, but the result i appeared as letely as though the ol the guidance of the Church by the carth had op‘m and swallowed him loly Spirit through centuries of its up. 'exi:tenoe, and therefore is a Godâ€"givâ€" His relatives in Berlin have not en opportunity; _ and no one who beard anything of him. His family, knows his own weakness and need of expecting a letter from him, waited a amencment will neglect the opportunâ€" . week before making enquiries. |ity. Speaking toâ€"night of the controverâ€" sy Chancellor Burwash said: "I think, in all fairness, that Mr. Jackson should not be judged untit the full contents of his lecture before the Y.M.C.A. are betore the public. The newspapers havo the negative side, _ which concerned the outward lorm of the revelation ‘given in Genâ€" esis, without adding his very strong statement with regard to the religâ€" jous contents ol the rovelation. The divine contents are, of course, the imâ€" portant mattor, i Feud Rests on Sabbath 1‘ Left OilSprings For Berlin on Recommends Feb. 1oth and Has Not Been | . Lines of D« building to preach in or a congregaâ€" tion to preach to. Toâ€"day there is a membership of ncearly 800 and the largest regular congregation in the city. It is a humiliation to have to speak of these things but when Dr. Elmore Harris warns the public against me as a man whose teaching is ‘Infidel‘ (such was his own word), I may be forgiven. * ‘‘Unless some unforseen circumstanâ€" ces _ should render it necessary, I shall not pursue this naatter further. Nothing was further from my thought in coming to Toronto than to be made the storm centre of an angry theological controversy; and though 1 have written this letfer under very considerable provocation, I trust that nothing has cscaped me which can ombitter the present strife, or which will not bear the reflection of a later and cooler hour." utes, with Dr. Shoop‘s .Croup Remâ€" edy. One test alonc will surely prove this truth. No vomiting, no disâ€" Barnia, Fob, 24.â€"Jacob Hauch, of Oil Springs; left his wile and four whildren on Wedneeday, Fobruary 10, io go to Berlin to visit his father, and has not been heard of since. Chie{l Pengelly, ol Sainisa, stated to 'T.\'mmrr-mtngt“ ? toâ€"day although police in all Western Ontario and some of the Mm_ethq_luhur notified , tress.| A safe and pleasing syrupâ€"50c Sold by all dealers. He was 30 years of age, and was a prosperous hay and grain buyer. The police of Sarnia, Berlin and Port Huron are completely mystified. His relatives in Berlin have _ not beard anything of him. _ His family, expecting a letter from him, waited a week before making enquiries. When Hauch teft home he had â€" $65 in his pocket and carried a gold watch. Croup positively stopped in 20 minâ€" S. H. Blake‘s Opinion 4. Lastly. Let it be our endeavor to bring our lives into harmony with our prayers. _ Prayer preâ€"supposes cfâ€" fort. It is a mockety to ask God to do for us what we do not try to do for ourselves, It is pur privilege to pray for ouselves and for others. But if we are in earnest we shalt not only pray, we shall also act in the digecâ€" tion of our prayers. If we ask (God fo cleanse us from the sin of profanâ€" ity, or of indolence, or of greed and vovetousness, we shall oursclves keep a watch over our speech, shake off our sloth, and repress eovetous desires. If we pray that God will save from ruin some one wham we love we shall ourâ€" selves do what we car to save him by the means within our power. So generally, atongâ€"with our prayers for ourselves _ and for others, we shall strive to our utmost to achieve hy our own energies and by the means at our command the blessings which we ask of God. Otherwise, prayer is mere words, utterly lacking in rgality and truth. _ Therefore think of _ the solemn words ol the prayers in which we join in the church or which we use at home, and remember that their. true value in God‘s sight is measurâ€" od uy the oforts which we put forth 3. Thirdly. _ Let there be more teâ€" qular and frequent attendance at the public services of the church and esâ€" pocially at the Lord‘s Supper. The public wotship and services of _ the church are means of grace, means,that is, whereby we are assured of God‘s favor, and lwy hold on things unscen, and wheoreby Divine blessings have evâ€" er come to waiting hearts. Hence it is that Christians are bidden in . the Bible "not to forsake the assombling of ourselves together," for where two or three are gathered together _ in Christ‘s namo, He has promised to be. in their midst. \ 3. Secondly, Family Prayers. We noed to read the Bible ourselves; but we need to read it also in the family. The reading of the Bible in the lamily and the joining together in untwdi prayer at the family altar is the sutâ€" est and only foundation of a happy and godly family life. If any heads of families have hitherto neglected this great source of blessing, will you not begin to have family prayers this Lent? _ 1. First, the reading of the Bible. We need to read it more thoughtully and more systematically. The Bible tells how God has made Himsel{ known to men. Experjence shows us how great on the one hand is its power to penetrate our disguises and lay bare our true condition (for "the Word of God is keen like a twoâ€"odged sword"); and how great on the other hand is its power to build up our spirâ€" itual life and to help us to live in communion with God. Let us give more time and thought and prayer to the reading of the Bible. l | _ His Lordship. Biship Wilyams, of ‘Muron has tssu>d the annual Lenten ’mmwudm.mw ‘ has been read in the various churches of this vicinity. The pastoral is as ‘lollovu:- Four lines of devotion I would speâ€" cially commend: 2. And this sellâ€"discipline is â€" the wecond work of Lent; the discipline of heart, mind and body; the bringing of every desire and every thought and evâ€" ery appolite into captivity to Christ. Jn this discipline or trajning jt is wise to be definite to fix upon points where you know that you lail, and then strive earnestly by prayer apd ‘effort to comquer. _ Unless you are in earnest, you will gain no strength and mo _ victory. A mercly aimless, or merely formal observance .of Lent, is not only useless, but abhorrent in the sight of God. But an garnest, prayerâ€" ful and porseveringâ€"effort to overcome our failures and to draw nearer . to Christ is sure _ to win the Divinc blessing, for the Lord hath said, ‘"Ask and ye shall have; seek and ye shall find; knock and it shall be opened unâ€" to you." â€" Let us put these or such questions to ourselves and endeavor to answer them faithfully as in the sight of God. This, if we do it faithfully, will shov us unerringly where we need selfâ€"disâ€" cipJine. _ 1. First, thete is selâ€"examination. A whole year has passed since the last call. Many things have bappened in the life of each one since that time, amd many joys, and, alas, many sorâ€" rows, many disappointments, and perâ€" baps a few triumphs. But in referâ€" exce to them all, but far the most important â€" question for each to ask, himself is this. Have they left me better or worse than they found mo Am I now, at the beginning of Lent in 1909, a better or worse man than I was in 19087 _ Am 1 following" Christ more closely? Am I using tlw1 talents, be they few or many, which God has entrusted to me, more in His service? In my personal life, in my fumily life, in my business life, is the sovereignty of God more ach:ow-‘ ledged? w nes of Derowes nif y ts Royal Household Flour ‘"‘Draw nigh to God and He _ will draw nigh to you." James 4:8. Believe Christ. In gonnection _ with the Canatian Natjonal Missjonary Congress, it is interesting to note that for the year 1908, the eontribution of churches in the _ United States and Canada . to home â€" and foreign missions {ncreased about $600,000, notwithstanding _ the financial depression in both countries, and it is conceded on both sides that this increase is cue to the Laymen‘s Missionary _ Movement. The Baptist churches of Toronto in an effort to raise _ their share at what Toronto churches are aiming at succeeded in raisingâ€"ten per cent. more than . (he total amount asked for, and secured $55,000 instcad of $50,000. cause our lives do not really support them. Let us, therefore, as the last devotional effort of this Lent, strive to bring our lives into harmony with our prayoets. A failing tiny nerveâ€"no larger than the finest silken threadâ€"takes from the Heart its impulse, its power, its regularity. It _ was Dr. Shoop who first told us it was wrong to drug a weak or failing stomach, Heart | or: Kidneys. His _ prescription â€" I)t.‘ Shoop‘s _ Restorativeâ€"is _ directed . straight for the cause of these nil-‘ mentsâ€"these weak and faltering . inâ€" side nerves. This, . no doubt, clearly explains why the Restorative has iof late grown so rapidly in popularity. Druggists say that those who tost the Restotative even for a few days sooun become fully convinced of its wonderâ€" ful merit. Anyway, don‘t drug the organ. Treating the cause of sickness is the only _ sensible and successful way. _ Sold by all dealers. Sand this com nams . and dnow or, and 1c. r:"h Zamâ€"Nuk n, Toraonto. â€" A free bog INCREASED CONTRIBUTIONS FREE BOX. 1 m oo o e o mt Come CoF vour ie and it Clearad avay all the foul matter and healed the wound up pleafy." * ‘ * Mr. Wiliam Piurser. of 1185. Rigin Avenue, wmflr. Man., says t="A% g L disevses 1 do not think thore is anything to equal Zamâ€"Buk. . Last year ont all ovar my fice. an | defied various remedies which, from time to thine, only were these sorss unsishtlv. bat they ware very painful. _ For over two In this way, antil I was advise! to try Zamâ€"Buk. °I found this baim was he ordinary remedie«, 1t reduced the irritation and the â€" Lfin. u-mw»: with "»c halrv:. #trewe l-;- --aikr 'IMV." t d to ',‘ persevorance 1 was able to clear my skin entirel tom all the sores erupt recommend Zamâ€"Bul to all who anfer from anv fi{n dhes sen i m ordinary remedie«, It reduced the irritation and the . The n anointed with the balm. svew le«s and less angry. t to persevarance 1 was able to clear my akin mllnlr from all the sores recommend Zamâ€"Buk to all who «nffer from any skin disease." LZamâ€"Nuk cures cnts, burns, bruises. sbrains. piles, festeri bloodâ€"fnisoning. ecsema. stahs. chapped hands, Nn cracks malp sores, bad led. disessed ankles. and all other shim Irndtists and stores sell at 500. bow, thres for $1.23, or post Toronto. for price. Mre. 8. {eam, of Queen Street, St. Jam pimples and sore« broke out on my forehead my face and neck. Smail red pimples, Je discharged and then became very sore, was t from this was terrjbhl«. and. whenever 1 wer sulted the family ,’;‘\"icium who gave me a l the disease the more, and to cause more pim and bedan applying Zim Hik. In a wnmlrrlull{ every pimnle was removed from my face and T have bad no return of this disease sinee, +o m Zamâ€"Mak for an opan runming wound on the cal some time, and it cTnm«! wsay all the foul matter 100 PX CCC C POWT PNUINWUN UE NTVSL! If you have any skin disease, scrofulous sore, fest ulcer, or an outbreak of pimples and eruptions, apply Zamâ€"Buk. Ap;y it freely at night. Let its healing essences sink well in! You will be surprised at its wonderful healing power. HOW ZAMâ€"BUK REMOVES SKINâ€" DisEASsEs. me yours Taithfully _ i DAVID HURON oke out on my forehead, and spread over the whole of one side of Smail red pimples, joining up into a kind of red rash, became very sore, was the form the disease took. '{ho Irei =. and. whenever 1 went out of doofs it was very painful. is the bestâ€"most wholesomeâ€" most carefully milled flour to be had in this country. The Ogilvie name and trademark are on every barrel and sack â€" a guarantee from the maker to the consumer. Tell your grocer you must have Royal Household. 18 Ogilvie Flour Mills Co., Limited, Montreal. James, Winnipeg, says:â€"" Some time back ‘Fhere is no other flour in Canada upon which half so much money is spent . to insure© perfect: purityâ€"just think for a moment what that means to the health of your household. ‘l 72 E" M _" _ fine, white, n"‘ltlomulJ hold under any othe! A few days ago a buyer from the States gave the high price of two thousand dollars to a farmer . near Brockville for one cow; this is believâ€" ed to be the highest price over paid for a Canadian cow. What made the animal so valuable? Granted that she was a model of beauty and an exquisâ€" ite type of her breed, the fact reâ€" mains _ that her actual performance largely helped to effect the sale. She has a record of 121 pounds of butâ€" ter in 80 days. ‘The records, those figâ€" ures down in black and white, assisâ€" ted in making the price. _ When farâ€" mers generally commence to keep toâ€" cords of _ individual cows we | may hope to develop not only more such excellent specimens, but a general imâ€" provement in the production of _ the average â€" herd. Records â€" alone _ can furnjsh the information necessary to enable intelligent selection of the proâ€" mising cows, and the rejection of q those that are nof profitable. Such s lection, coupled with more liberal feeding, will repay any farmer abundâ€" antly. As seores of farmers in Car ada can testify, it hus often resulted in an additional fifteen and even twenâ€" tyâ€"live dollars income per cow within four years. This meang millions â€" of dullars extra for the farmers of Onâ€" ; ltario and Quebec, even from the preâ€" l sent number of cows. The Dairy Comâ€" missJoner, Oltawa, will be glad _ to supply _ record blanks for weights of milk, and to assist in organizing cow testing associations. CF.W. Just at this season, “mplu. face sores, eruptions, scrof diseases, and eczema, are very common because the winter has thrown extra work on to the skin, and in many cases the skin has been unable to do this extra work, Zamâ€"Buk is a skin tonic. Your skin needs a tonic just as much as your stomach or liver JL’ST as your skin is, so is your health. If the pores of your skin are not acting proper|y, the wastes of your body are not getting away as they should, and this means that your kidpeys, liver, lungs, and heart have to take on extra duty. Your skin requires periodical cleaning, just as the housewife knows that the stove requires perlodical sha down to make it burn brightly. Chicago, lis., Feb. 28.â€"Three holdâ€" up men â€" accused of the theft of 46 couts were sentenced to life terms in the penitentiary by a jury in Judge Kerr‘s court yesterday This _ senâ€" tenee was made possible by the pasâ€" sage of a law (wo years ago â€" proâ€" viding the severe penslty inflicted for highway robbery cominitted with the aid of deadly weapons. YOUR SKIN REFLEGTS __ YoUR HEALTH] _ THREE GO DOWN FOR LIFE GoOOD COWs JN DEMAND post free from periodical shaking iess "Bukt // 499

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